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8 Days a week.

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Presentation on theme: "8 Days a week."— Presentation transcript:

1 8 Days a week

2 Introduction and ending for 8 Days a Week.
E/D G/D 1 2 3 1 2 3 X X 0 1 2 X X 0 3 A letter then a slash then a letter means: First letter is name of the chord. Slash indicates that the next letter is the bass of the chord. So E/D would be an E chord with a D note as the bass or lowest note. X X 0 Notice that the same fingering applies to many chords. The introduction to 8 Days a Week is: 4/4 ||: D | E/D | G/D | D : ||

3 D E/D (E with a D Bass) G/D (G with a D bass)
Same for Guitar 2. Leave 1st and 4th string open as drones.

4 Timbre (tonal) differences
Notice the difference in sound when you play close to the bridge compared to over the sound hole on your guitar. The reason is that when you play over the bridge the overtones are sounding louder and the fundamental (note you play) are softer in volume. Overtones are the multiples of the fundamental tone. For example, if you played an A = 440 Hz. Then the overtones would be 880 (2X), 1320 (3X), 1760 (4X), 2200 (5X) etc. The closer you play to the bridge the louder those overtones sound and the softer the fundamental sounds. For 8 Days a week play over the sound hole until you get to the section starting with an A chord (bridge of the song) then play near the bridge, on the repeat go back to playing over the sound hole.

5 Strum over the sound hole of the guitar.
(Strum near the bridge of the guitar)


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